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Pittsburgh City Council Wants to Pay $75K in Teen Beating Claim

The Pittsburgh City Council is considering a bill that would pay $75,000 to a former performing arts student who says in a civil rights lawsuit against the city that he was wrongly beaten by three undercover officers.

PITTSBURGH — The Pittsburgh City Council is considering a bill that would pay $75,000 to a former performing arts student who says in a civil rights lawsuit against the city that he was wrongly beaten by three undercover officers.

An attorney for Jordan Miles didn't immediately return a call on the bill, which was reported Tuesday by the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review.

The then-18-year-old violinist was arrested and beaten on Jan. 12, 2010. A judge threw out resisting arrest charges against Miles, who says he believed the plainclothes officers didn't identify themselves and meant him harm.

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The officers have said they thought Miles was trespassing and mistook his soda bottle for a gun. Miles says he didn't even have a bottle and was accosted for being young and black in a high-crime area.